Following the defendant’s conviction in the Superior Court of Hall County on July 21, 1952, under an accusation which charged him in general terms with- the possession of alcoholic liquors in Hall County on July 12, 1952, such conviction would operate as a bar to another prosecution for the same offense committed at any time within the two-year period immediately preceding the filing of the accusation, which we will presume to have been filed on July 21, 1952.
Webb
v.
State,
13
Ga. App.
733 (
Where, at the time a witness is called to the stand, an objection is interposed to his testifying, on the ground that, having been adjudged insane and never restored to sanity, he is incompetent, and the trial court, without making any preliminary examination of the witness or of the witness’s understanding of the nature of an oath, rules, “I will permit him to testify and let the jury pass on whether he is competent or not”—a new trial will be granted. Under the circumstances of this case, the trial court failed to exercise any discretion in determining the competency of the witness, but left the matter entirely for the jury. The statute requires that the trial court pass upon the competency of witnesses. Code § 38-1610 provides: “The court shall, by examination, decide upon the capacity of one alleged to be incompetent from idiocy, lunacy, or insanity, or drunkenness,
*15
or infancy.” The court made no examination, and this failure to comply with the requirements of the statute requires the grant of a new trial.
Young
v.
State,
122
Ga.
725 (
“On a prosecution for a particular crime, evidence which in any manner shows or tends to show that the accused has committed another crime wholly distinct, independent) and separate from that for which he is on trial, even though it be a crime of the same sort, is irrelevant and inadmissible, unless there be shown some logical connection between the two from which it can be said that proof of the one tends to establish the other.”
Bacon
v.
State,
209
Ga.
261 (
The other errors assigned are such as are not likely to recur on another trial and are not considered.
Judgment reversed.
